he told the persons to hold on
It has five metrical feet that each contain an unstressed syllable immediately followed by a stressed one.
In Sonnet 12 the poet describes how the counting of the clock and other indicators of time's passage cause him to become concerned at the fate of his young addressee's beauty. He concludes that the youth can beat Time and preserve his beauty only by begetting offspring. The clock to which he refers was probably a bell, whose chimes had to be counted in order to ascertain the time. In those days most clocks consisted of bells without any visual device (such as the hands and face familiar to us today). Indeed, the word "clock" is derived from the Latin "clocca", like the French "cloche", meaning a bell.
A Watch or a Clock
You can find this out by reading Act 1 Scene 1 of the play, which tells you exactly how Shakespeare chose to start the play.
There is no such thing. Shakespeare did not write short stories, or novels, or any kind of narrative prose. He wrote a couple of narrative poems which told a story, called Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece. But mostly what he wrote were plays, as well as a number of sonnets.
The Rape of Lucrece and Venus and Adonis are poems which tells a story. Although Macbeth and other works tell stories and are partly in verse, they are plays not poems. Shakespeare's sonnets are poems but do not tell a story.
Sonnet 12 follows iambic pentameter with ten syllables per line, arranged in pairs of alternating stressed and unstressed syllables. For instance, "When I do count the clock that tells the time" is comprised of five iambs (unstressed-stressed pairs), demonstrating the metrical pattern commonly found in Shakespearean sonnets.
A machine that tells time
A machine that tells time
It has five metrical feet that each contain an unstressed syllable immediately followed by a stressed one.
In Sonnet 12 the poet describes how the counting of the clock and other indicators of time's passage cause him to become concerned at the fate of his young addressee's beauty. He concludes that the youth can beat Time and preserve his beauty only by begetting offspring. The clock to which he refers was probably a bell, whose chimes had to be counted in order to ascertain the time. In those days most clocks consisted of bells without any visual device (such as the hands and face familiar to us today). Indeed, the word "clock" is derived from the Latin "clocca", like the French "cloche", meaning a bell.
I hate reading counts. I can't find the freakin URL. If someone tells me what it is for Warsaw Indiana greatly freaking happy but reading counts sucks.
the sun
ROMEO AND JULIO
Time it is the purpose we can see the time in the clock.
It's a clock that is synced with a service that tells time based on the movement of an atom.
a clock